Martin said that he had not seen Harriet on that day. He was lying. He had arrived in
Hedestad earlier in the day and he was on Järnvägsgatan, face to face with his
sister. Blomkvist could prove the lie with photographs that had been buried for
almost forty years.
Harriet Vanger had seen her brother and reacted with shock. She had gone out to
Hedeby Island and tried to talk to Henrik, but she was gone before any
conversation could take place. What were you thinking of telling him? Uppsala? But
Lena Andersson, Uppsala, was not on the list. You could not have known about it.
The story still did not make sense to Blomkvist. Harriet had disappeared around
3:00 in the afternoon. Martin was unquestionably on the other side of the water at
that time. He could be seen in the photograph from the church hill. He could not
possibly have hurt Harriet on the island. One puzzle piece was still missing. An
accomplice? Anita Vanger?
From the archives Salander could see that Gottfried Vanger’s position within the
firm had changed over the years. At the age of twenty in 1947, he met Isabella and
immediately got her pregnant; Martin Vanger was born in 1948, and with that there
was no question but that the young people would marry.
When Gottfried was twenty-two, he was brought into the main office of the Vanger
Corporation by Henrik Vanger. He was obviously talented and they may have been
grooming him to take over. He was promoted to the board at the age of twenty-
five, as the assistant head of the company’s development division. A rising star.
Sometime in the mid-fifties his star began to plummet. He drank. His marriage to
Isabella was on the rocks. The children, Harriet and Martin, were not doing well. Henrik
drew the line. Gottfried’s career had reached its zenith. In 1956 another
appointment was made, another assistant head of development. Two assistant
heads: one who did the work while Gottfried drank and was absent for long periods
of time.
But Gottfried was still a Vanger, as well as charming and eloquent. From 1957 on,
his work seemed to consist of travelling around the country to open factories,
resolve local conflicts, and spread an image that company management really did
care. We’re sending out one of our own sons to listen to your problems. We do take you
seriously.